Exploring the determinants of FinTech adoption and intention to use in Jordan: The impact of COVID-19

被引:9
作者
Almashhadani, Ibrahim S. [1 ]
Abuhashesh, Mohammad [1 ]
Mohammad, Ashraf Bany [2 ]
Masa'deh, Ra'ed [2 ]
Al-Khasawneh, Mohammad
机构
[1] Princess Sumaya Univ Technol PSUT, E Mkt & Social Media Dept, Amman, Jordan
[2] Univ Jordan, Sch Business, Dept Management Informat Syst, Amman, Jordan
关键词
FinTech; technology adoption; behavioral intention; TAM and UTAUT theories; COVID-19; lockdowns; Jordan; INTERNET BANKING ADOPTION; MOBILE BANKING; PERCEIVED RISK; BEHAVIORAL INTENTION; CONSUMERS ADOPTION; ACCEPTANCE; SERVICES; TECHNOLOGY; INNOVATIVENESS; PERSPECTIVES;
D O I
10.1080/23311886.2023.2256536
中图分类号
C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
This study explores FinTech adoption in Jordan during and post-COVID-19 pandemic by integrating and extending the TAM and UTAUT theories to predict behavioral intention to use FinTech. Six predictors were hypothesized to test their impact on behavioral intention: perceived usefulness, perceived ease of use, social influence, personal innovativeness, financial risks, and privacy risks. while using COVID-19 lockdowns as a moderator. Using structural equation modeling (SEM) on a sample of 296 respondents, the data analysis results indicated that the proposed variables, including the predictors and the moderator, accounted for 38.4% of the variation in behavioral intention to use FinTech. Which clearly shows the important impact of COVID-19 on increasing the adoption of technologies and especially FinTech's in the Jordanian context. The empirical findings revealed that perceived usefulness and personal innovativeness had the most significant impact on behavioral intention. In contrast, privacy risks had no significant impact on behavioral intention. Besides, this study empirically demonstrated the impact of COVID-19 lockdowns as a moderator. The impact of COVID-19 lockdowns significantly moderated the relationship between perceived usefulness, perceived ease of use, personal innovativeness, and financial risks with behavioral intention. The result of this study contributes to both theory and practice by adding to the existing literature on FinTech adoption using new determinants that might drive behavioral intention to use FinTech services.
引用
收藏
页数:18
相关论文
共 83 条
[21]   COVID-19, consumer behavior, technology, and society: A literature review and bibliometric analysis [J].
Cruz-Cardenas, Jorge ;
Zabelina, Ekaterina ;
Guadalupe-Lanas, Jorge ;
Palacio-Fierro, Andres ;
Ramos-Galarza, Carlos .
TECHNOLOGICAL FORECASTING AND SOCIAL CHANGE, 2021, 173
[22]   FinTech payments in the era of COVID-19: Factors influencing behavioral intentions of "Generation X"in Hungary to use mobile payment [J].
Daragmeh, Ahmad ;
Lentner, Csaba ;
Sagi, Judit .
JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL AND EXPERIMENTAL FINANCE, 2021, 32
[23]   USER ACCEPTANCE OF COMPUTER-TECHNOLOGY - A COMPARISON OF 2 THEORETICAL-MODELS [J].
DAVIS, FD ;
BAGOZZI, RP ;
WARSHAW, PR .
MANAGEMENT SCIENCE, 1989, 35 (08) :982-1003
[25]   Predicting e-services adoption: a perceived risk facets perspective [J].
Featherman, MS ;
Pavlou, PA .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HUMAN-COMPUTER STUDIES, 2003, 59 (04) :451-474
[26]   Determinants of Technology Acceptance: Two Model-Based Meta-Analytic Reviews [J].
Feng, Guangchao Charles ;
Su, Xianglin ;
Lin, Zhiliang ;
He, Yiru ;
Luo, Nan ;
Zhang, Yuting .
JOURNALISM & MASS COMMUNICATION QUARTERLY, 2021, 98 (01) :83-104
[27]   Mobile payments adoption - introducing mindfulness to better understand consumer behavior [J].
Flavian, Carlos ;
Guinaliu, Miguel ;
Lu, Yuntao .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BANK MARKETING, 2020, 38 (07) :1575-1599
[28]  
Fu J, 2022, TECHNOL ADOPT DUR CR, V50, P100945
[29]   Adoption of mobile banking services A comparative analysis of four competing theoretical models [J].
Giovanis, Apostolos ;
Athanasopoulou, Pinelopi ;
Assimakopoulos, Costas ;
Sarmaniotis, Christos .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BANK MARKETING, 2019, 37 (05) :1165-1189
[30]   To FinTech and Beyond [J].
Goldstein, Itay ;
Jiang, Wei ;
Karolyi, G. Andrew .
REVIEW OF FINANCIAL STUDIES, 2019, 32 (05) :1647-1661